Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta space. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta space. Mostrar todas las entradas

martes, 6 de octubre de 2020

Artists create paintings designed to be tempered in space on Blue Origin’s rocket

Jeff Hein in studioJeff Hein works in his art studio, testing his paints and creative processes on an exterior panel of Blue Origin’s New Shepard suborbital spaceship. (Uplift Aerospace Photo)

Uplift Aerospace and Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin rocket venture plan to put paintings where virtually no art has gone before: on the side of a rocket ship.

The “canvases” for these works are exterior panels that will be mounted on Blue Origin’s suborbital New Shepard spaceship, sent to the space frontier during an uncrewed test flight, then returned to Earth for delivery to the paintings’ purchasers.

Two Utah artists known for their realist and surrealist paintings — Jeff Hein and Mark R. Pugh — will come up with creations that are meant to weather the aerodynamically challenging ascent and descent through the atmosphere. Uplift Aerospace has conducted tests to ensure that the paint’s adhesion, integrity and relative coloration will endure the rigors of space travel. But the tests also suggest that the trip will alter the art. And that’s OK.

“The Mona Lisa would not move today’s viewer quite so poignantly without the telltale signs of its now centuries-old story and its emergence from the brush of a Renaissance master,” Dakota Bradshaw, a museum specialist who’s associated with the project, said in a news release. “Journey and story will also leave a unique and indelible mark on Uplift Aerospace’s first artwork to return from space travel.”

Josh Hanes, the owner of Utah-based Uplift Aerospace, made the arrangements with Blue Origin and the artists to get the project off the ground. “The idea that the artwork will be lit by distant galaxies, with Earth as a backdrop, is a beautiful visualization — and I think this characteristic will allow viewers a closer connection with the cosmos and the precious planet we call home,” Hanes said.

The artists worked with engineers and experts on space materials to concoct their creations. “I like to create art as a mix of traditional imagery with modern elements,” Pugh said. “Painting with a classical approach on the side of a rocket is an exciting way to merge the traditional with the modern.”

For his part, Hein said it’ll be “thrilling to have an expression of my humanity propelled into outer space.”

“After 18 years of painting, I have been fortunate to show my work all over the world, but I’ve never shown in space,” he said. “It’s truly amazing.”

Mark Pugh and paintsMark Pugh tries out the paints and the substrate used for the New Shepard art project. (Uplink Aerospace Photo)

There are plenty of precedents for space art — whether we’re talking about the late Apollo astronaut Alan Bean, who devoted himself to painting visions of spaceflight after his 1969 trip to the moon; or shuttle astronaut Nicole Stott, who painted watercolors during her stint on the International Space Station; or John Stahr, the earthbound artist who painted “Galactic Girl” on the nose of Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo rocket plane.

Blue Origin got into the act last year with a student art contest that was organized with support from OK Go, a geeky band that specializes in viral music videos.

Bezos’ space company hasn’t yet announced when New Shepard will next fly. The most recent test flight took place last December, when the winning entries in the OK Go contest were taken for a ride. Since then, the coronavirus pandemic has put a giant crimp in Blue Origin’s development timeline. But if it took Michelangelo four years to paint the ceiling of Sistine Chapel, Uplift Aerospace’s artists can surely wait a few months for space to put the finishing touch on their paintings.

Uplift Aerospace is currently accepting bids for the New Shepard paintings. Check out Uplift’s website for access to the bidding portal and further information about the art.

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lunes, 17 de agosto de 2020

Life-and-career path platform OwnTrail raises $250K, builds ‘work from garage’ office space

The OwnTrail crew working on their garage-based office, from left to right: Carolyn Dunn, vice president of engineering, Rebekah Bastian, co-founder and CEO, and Kt McBratney, co-founder and chief brand officer. (Photos courtesy of Max Bastian)

Seattle-based OwnTrail launched in February, just before COVID-19 turned the world upside down — but the startup is weathering the pandemic largely unscathed.

“We’re about helping women make it through hard things,” said co-founder and CEO Rebekah Bastian.

The platform allows women to plot their career and life paths, calling out milestones in their careers, personal relationships and health, while sharing the routes pursued by other women to provide insights and lessons from their journeys. The underlying message is that there is no right way to find happiness.

OwnTrail has grown to include 1,000 registered users and more than 350 profiles in which users share their career and life paths. The business is partnering with organizations including Future For Us, Built By Girls, Women In Product and others to help the groups provide activities and a space for their members to connect.

The OwnTrail team works together in a reimagined garage that is now an office space.

The startup recently closed a $250,000 fundraising round and initiated a crowdfunding campaign that runs through late August to raise an additional $20,000. Bastian said the company opted for crowdfunding “to build awareness and test out demand for our business models.” It is more than 70% toward its funding goal.